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This is no time to be making inferior scrambled eggsāeach shell must be cracked with a purpose and cooked to perfection. While youāve probably scrambled a good few eggs in your time, itās important to know that there are multiple ways to set up your scramble, and each way delivers a different result. Find out if youāve actually been scrambling up the perfect egg, or if you need to switch your method.
There are plenty of ingredients that can alter the texture of your eggs, so I wanted to keep the components consistent to zoom in on which texture results from each scrambling tool (whisk, fork, immersion blender, and jar shaking).
The addition of mix-ins like chopped meat, herbs, or cheese and using water, milk, cream or nothing at all can change things (some more than others). Of course, it depends on what youāre hungry for that day, but I will say this: too much of any liquid can lead to rubbery scrambled eggs. In an effort to evaporate the excess moisture you may resort to cooking the eggs longer and the proteins will constrict until theyāre tight and chewy. Always use a small amount if you use any liquid at all, about a teaspoon per two eggs.
If youāre completely starting from scratch with how you like to cook scrambled eggs, then you might want to read a bit more about cooking them low and slow or hot and fast. Low and slow can lead to more custardy eggs with tiny, porridge-like curds. Hot and fast will give you larger hunks of egg.
In these tests I prepared the mixture the same way every timeātwo eggs with a half-teaspoon of heavy cream and a pinch of saltāand cooked them in a lightly buttered pan over low heat just bridging on medium. I was surprised to note the results. There is no wrong scrambled egg, by the way. Some folks like them dry and some like them custardy. Either way, hereās how to achieve the best one for you.
Credit: Allie Chanthorn Reinmann
I expected this to yield the most clumpy egg, and firm pieces. Surprisingly, a classic fork scramble for 20 to 30 seconds yields a soft, medium curd. Compared to the immersion blender and the whisk, fork scrambling is actually a pretty gentle way to handle your eggs. The eggs ended up tender and silky.
Credit: Allie Chanthorn Reinmann
As expected, running the immersion blender for 30 seconds created a heavily aerated mixtureāthe egg liquid nearly doubled in volume in that short blending time. This resulted in quick-cooking, fluffy ribbons of egg. The fine bubbles cooked quickly along the sides of the pan and naturally Iād swipe along the sides to stir them into the center. This scramble was more firm and fluffy and the texture was light.
Credit: Allie Chanthorn Reinmann
I donāt usually shake my eggs, but I might start. My eggs, salt, and cream went into a small jar (an old amarena cherry jar from Trader Joeās. IYKYK.) and I shook the heck out of it for about 30 seconds (with the lid on, of course). Even though I shook it vigorously, this method is one of the more gentle scrambling methods. Instead of using a metal tool, which adds air to the mix, the jar contains the eggs as they break up against the walls.
This scramble was soft and silky, even more so than with using a fork. Itās easier to get small curds with this mixing style. I didn't go full-porridge here, but if you do like a creamy, porridge consistency then you should start jar-shakinā and cook them on very low heat.
Credit: Allie Chanthorn Reinmann
I expected whisked eggs to be similar to fork-scrambled, but things turned out differently again. Quickly whisking my eggs led to similar results to using the immersionāfirm, fluffy ribbons. You can see that the ribbons are shorter (more like chips) than what the immersion blender produced. I could argue that they were less firm than the immersion, but if I had to do a blind taste test, Iād probably confuse the two.
The pattern from these four tests comes down to aeration. The more you agitate your eggs and add air bubbles to them, the fluffier and firmer they will be. Obviously the immersion blender has a lot of power behind it so youāll get plenty of foam with an appliance like this. The whisk is designed to whip air into liquids so, again, more foam.
The more gentle you are with your scrambleāa four-tined fork or a simple shakeākeeps your egg mixture tender and silky, with fewer bubbles incorporated. I thought Iād be immersion blending my scramble from here on out, but I very well might become a jar shaker. Life is unpredictable, isnāt it?
Full story here:
Heat and added ingredients
There are plenty of ingredients that can alter the texture of your eggs, so I wanted to keep the components consistent to zoom in on which texture results from each scrambling tool (whisk, fork, immersion blender, and jar shaking).
The addition of mix-ins like chopped meat, herbs, or cheese and using water, milk, cream or nothing at all can change things (some more than others). Of course, it depends on what youāre hungry for that day, but I will say this: too much of any liquid can lead to rubbery scrambled eggs. In an effort to evaporate the excess moisture you may resort to cooking the eggs longer and the proteins will constrict until theyāre tight and chewy. Always use a small amount if you use any liquid at all, about a teaspoon per two eggs.
If youāre completely starting from scratch with how you like to cook scrambled eggs, then you might want to read a bit more about cooking them low and slow or hot and fast. Low and slow can lead to more custardy eggs with tiny, porridge-like curds. Hot and fast will give you larger hunks of egg.
How to scramble your favorite eggs
In these tests I prepared the mixture the same way every timeātwo eggs with a half-teaspoon of heavy cream and a pinch of saltāand cooked them in a lightly buttered pan over low heat just bridging on medium. I was surprised to note the results. There is no wrong scrambled egg, by the way. Some folks like them dry and some like them custardy. Either way, hereās how to achieve the best one for you.
Regular fork scramble

Credit: Allie Chanthorn Reinmann
I expected this to yield the most clumpy egg, and firm pieces. Surprisingly, a classic fork scramble for 20 to 30 seconds yields a soft, medium curd. Compared to the immersion blender and the whisk, fork scrambling is actually a pretty gentle way to handle your eggs. The eggs ended up tender and silky.
Immersion blender

Credit: Allie Chanthorn Reinmann
As expected, running the immersion blender for 30 seconds created a heavily aerated mixtureāthe egg liquid nearly doubled in volume in that short blending time. This resulted in quick-cooking, fluffy ribbons of egg. The fine bubbles cooked quickly along the sides of the pan and naturally Iād swipe along the sides to stir them into the center. This scramble was more firm and fluffy and the texture was light.
Shake āem in a jar

Credit: Allie Chanthorn Reinmann
I donāt usually shake my eggs, but I might start. My eggs, salt, and cream went into a small jar (an old amarena cherry jar from Trader Joeās. IYKYK.) and I shook the heck out of it for about 30 seconds (with the lid on, of course). Even though I shook it vigorously, this method is one of the more gentle scrambling methods. Instead of using a metal tool, which adds air to the mix, the jar contains the eggs as they break up against the walls.
This scramble was soft and silky, even more so than with using a fork. Itās easier to get small curds with this mixing style. I didn't go full-porridge here, but if you do like a creamy, porridge consistency then you should start jar-shakinā and cook them on very low heat.
Whisked

Credit: Allie Chanthorn Reinmann
I expected whisked eggs to be similar to fork-scrambled, but things turned out differently again. Quickly whisking my eggs led to similar results to using the immersionāfirm, fluffy ribbons. You can see that the ribbons are shorter (more like chips) than what the immersion blender produced. I could argue that they were less firm than the immersion, but if I had to do a blind taste test, Iād probably confuse the two.
The pattern from these four tests comes down to aeration. The more you agitate your eggs and add air bubbles to them, the fluffier and firmer they will be. Obviously the immersion blender has a lot of power behind it so youāll get plenty of foam with an appliance like this. The whisk is designed to whip air into liquids so, again, more foam.
The more gentle you are with your scrambleāa four-tined fork or a simple shakeākeeps your egg mixture tender and silky, with fewer bubbles incorporated. I thought Iād be immersion blending my scramble from here on out, but I very well might become a jar shaker. Life is unpredictable, isnāt it?
Full story here: